1198 or 848 w/ Exhaust?

Started by psycledelic, November 18, 2009, 07:38:01 PM

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RC Fan

Quote from: psycledelic on November 18, 2009, 08:33:05 PM
 I borrowed my friends CBR1000 for a day and now I am hooked.  I didn't care for the cabled clutch or the high pitched whine of his TwoBrothers (man was it loud ;D).  But I liked the body positioning and really liked the way it handled.  Not that I fight my Monster in the corners, but that bike was something else.  

How much can you get a leftover CBR1000RR for?
Cathy

Previous bikes:  2007 Suzuki Bandit 650S & 2009 Ducati Monster 696
Current bikes:  2009 Yamaha XT250 & 2012 Triumph Street Triple R

El Matador

Quote from: RC Fan on November 19, 2009, 08:02:48 AM
How much can you get a leftover CBR1000RR for?

7K. They are basically giving them away. You can get 2 of them for the price of the 848.

But I vote 1198 [evil] You can always save up for pipes. Not so much for a new engine. Besides, the monoblocks alone are worth it if you're ever on the track; they're like hitting a brick wall  ;D


Quote from: swampduc on November 19, 2009, 07:13:57 AM
You have to flog an 848 to get the performance out of it. Admittedly the one I rode didn't have pipes, and I hear those completely transform the bike. I normally ride a 996 though, and even without the top end hp of the 848 and the large weight advantage the 848 has, the 996 just feels stronger. Much more low end grunt.

Big +1. The power from the bigger bikes is so manageable. It's not jumpy, but always there when you want it.

I miss my 996  :'(

Triple J

Quote from: RC Fan on November 19, 2009, 08:02:48 AM
How much can you get a leftover CBR1000RR for?

A dealer had one sitting at Thunderhill a few months ago during a trackday for $9999 out the door! Very good deal!  :o

RC Fan

Quote from: El Matador on November 19, 2009, 08:29:55 AM
7K. They are basically giving them away. You can get 2 of them for the price of the 848.

Wow!  I'll take one for that.  Waaay over my head, but I'd try my best to adjust!

Quote from: Triple JA dealer had one sitting at Thunderhill a few months ago during a trackday for $9999 out the door! Very good deal!

That's not bad either.
Cathy

Previous bikes:  2007 Suzuki Bandit 650S & 2009 Ducati Monster 696
Current bikes:  2009 Yamaha XT250 & 2012 Triumph Street Triple R

DRKWNG

Quote from: mac900 on November 18, 2009, 08:30:47 PM
If you've got the dough and don't have to ride too much in city traffic then get the 1198.

The 848 is better in traffic but unless you weigh 240 lbs. it needs a rear shock far more than it needs exhaust. That said I put an Ohlins on the back along with Termi slip ons so who am I to talk?

If power up the wazoo is important to you then get the 1198.

This is very true!  I rode this bike back to back with a stock 848 a few weeks ago on a very familiar twisty road.  The difference was night and day.  On the stock bike, you would get set for the corner, select your line and commit, only to have the rear end's stiffness push the front wide and cause you to have to readjust.  On Mac's bike it was almost like set and forget.  The bike just flowed through the turns like you wouldn't believe.  I was SERIOUSLY impressed with the difference, and the shock is a much more beneficial upgrade over the Termis. 

psycledelic

OK, this is probably gonna sound like a stupid question, but I talked Chris into riding my bike and letting me ride his 999 Sunday.  Any insight on which of the bikes a 05ish 999 with full exhaust would be a closer comarison to? 
I know that I need to just go test ride the actual bikes, but test rides seem to be uptight and formal with the sales rep riding with you and being on a bike with hardly any miles on it.  Long as I don't drop it, Chris really doesn't care how I ride his bike (which, after saying that, makes me a little concerned about him on my Monster).
06 S2R800 - the wife                         [Dolph]
04 999s - the mistress

DRKWNG

Mac can answer this one, as he had a modded out '03 999 before getting the 848.  One thing I will say though is that the 999 had a much stronger sense of urgency when you got on the gas.  That bike just lunged forward and all that torque is more than a little addictive.  ;)

MadDuck

True that.  The 999 is much closer to the 1098/1198.  If someone is saying that the 848 makes more power than the early 999 then they are only talking about the last itty bit at max revs.  In the real riding world mid rpm range there is no comparison.  A 996/998/999/1098 will walk-run from an 848 given a bit of straight. Having all that power is wonderful but I don't think the power is child's play manageable. You have to pay a bit more attention. All that said the 848 is still a great bike in it's own right and I'm not sorry that I have one. Of course, where I live plays a big factor in that.
No modification goes unpunished. Memento mori.  Good people drink good beer.  Things happen pretty fast at high speeds.

It's all up to your will level, your thrill level and your skill level.  Everything else is just fluff.

hadesducati848

 yeah what he said ... i am very happy with my 848 even though its not black and when comparing the power with a liter bike i am not unhappy at all. my R1 that i had before was scary fast so much power and torque the front wheel almost always lifted under hard acceleration. on my 8 i stay on the lower rpm for city driving in traffic with no worries and when i want more power i just open the throttle up and let the rpm climb
it is so much easier to get forgiveness then it will ever be to get permission.